[CW] N2DAN - Steve Nurkiewicz - A Truly Amazing Story

David Ring djringjr at gmail.com
Tue Dec 6 16:03:54 EST 2022



N2DAN, Steve Nurkiewicz, he was the machinist who made the Mercury paddles, 
he was member of the First-Class CW Operators Club - (FOC).

Steve's original call was WA2YBR 1962 Floral Park, Long Island, New York, 
WA2YBR later became N2DAN (1972?) and because of that, people started 
calling him "Dan", even later about 1979, Steve moved to Port Charlotte, FL.


[image: WA2YBR QSL Card][image: N2DAN QSL]

Steve "Dan" Nurkiewicz was a well known manufacturer to the famous handmade 
Mercury Morse Paddle.

READ ON - the first section has been known for a while but the addition at 
the bottom is new to me and probably to most of you because Steve was a 
friend of mine and I know this story but this adds to it.  / DR

The article below appeared in Parade Magazine March 22, 1981.

"How a son found his parents after 40 years"

If prizes were awarded for family reunions, Stefan Nurkiewicz of Freeport, 
N.Y. would surely win a blue ribbon. His reunion with his parents was 40 
years in the making and took the unlikely combination of Polish-American 
friendship, luck and a father's singular determination to see his son again.

The dramatic meeting between Nurkiewicz, a 54-year-old machinist, and his 
80-year-old father marked the end of a tragic separation that began in the 
war-torn Poland of 1939.

At first glance, the ruddy-faced bespectacled Nurkiewicz is the "average 
American." He married the girl next door, has two handsome children, an 
attractive waterfront home, and a successful precision machine shop he and 
his wife built together "by working until 2 or 3 in the morning."

But "Steve" Nurkiewicz is no ordinary American. He was born near the Polish 
border with the Soviet Union in 1926. Thirteen years later, his father 
Zdzislaw, a dashing cavalry commander, would lead his men--armed only with 
sabers and lances--into battle against invading Nazi troops. Stefan parted 
with his heroic father on that day, Sept. 2, 1939.

Just two weeks later, Russian soldiers crossed the border 10 miles away to 
claim a huge expanse of eastern Poland. Thousands of frightened Poles, 
including Mrs. Nurkiewicz and her children, were rounded up and herded into 
railroad cars for a torturous three-week trip to a hellish Siberian exile.

Within the next two years, two of Stefan's younger brothers died of 
malnutrition and illness. Then a sympathetic doctor, pitying the family's 
misery, allowed him to join an army of Polish exiles fighting for the 
Allies.

He was sent to Tehran for training, and then fought in Allied campaigns in 
the Middle East, North Africa and Monte Casino, Italy, where he was wounded.

After the war, not knowing if his parents were still alive and unable to 
return to his Soviet-occupied homeland, Stefan immigrated to Brooklyn.

The story might have ended there if it hadn't been for a wartime photograph 
(taken for a Polish magazine called Parade) of the teenaged soldier Stefan 
and a 47-year-old veteran who had become his unofficial guardian. It was 
published in Polish newspapers and later in a book in which the repatriated 
Zdzislaw Nurkiewicz and his wife jazefa excitedly recognized their son and 
began the long search to locate him.

The elderly cavalry soldier had miraculously survived the German 
destruction of the Polish military, but he had become an enemy of the 
Soviet-controlled government for having dared to fight the invading 
Russians. He evaded the authorities for a while, but eventually the secret 
police caught up with him. He was tried as a "bandit" and sentenced to 
death. But the sentence was commuted to 15 years in prison. Meanwhile, 
Stefan's mother scrubbed floors in Poland to feed herself. And in Brooklyn, 
Stefan Nurkiewicz was raising a family and establishing his successful 
business.

"I really thought they were all dead," he recalls," I gave up hope, and 
gradually it helped me to forget. The Germans had destroyed the Polish 
army, and getting my mother out of the Soviet Union would have been like 
squeezing water from a stone."

Then a chance encounter in New York City in 1977 set off a bizarre chain of 
events. Stefan had read that a touring Polish orchestra was in town, and 
being a musician himself (he plays bass, he decided to drop by for a drink 
with his countrymen.

"I then gave them my business card and told them to give me a call if they 
were ever in New York." His acquaintances did better than that. Months 
later, when the troupe returned to Poland, the card was passed along to 
Kazik Nurkiewicz, a violinist friend of the symphony musicians who was also 
the keeper of the Nurkiewicz family tree and who happened to be Stefan's 
cousin.

A letter was sent immediately to the American's business address. "I'm 
writing in the name of your father. If you're the man we're seeking, this 
would make your father extremely happy," declared Kazik.

But bad luck cropped up again. The machinist had moved, his home and 
business. The undelivered letter was returned to Poland. Undaunted, the 
elder Nurkiewicz, now released from prison and full of hope for the first 
time in 15 years, wrote to the same address. That note, too, was sent back.

But the stubborn old cavalry commander wasn't going to give up. The postman 
gave his next letter to a former business associate of Stefan's, who 
offered to deliver it by hand. So on Dec. 6, 1979, a trembling Steve 
Nurkiewicz opened the following letter and read the neat Polish script.

"Dear Sir, I'm seeking one named Stefan Nurkiewicz, born in 1926 in 
Nieswicz, .if you are the person I'm seeking, please answer.I would like to 
close my eyes in peace."

Shouting to his wife Terry, Steve ran to phone the man at the return 
address. But 40 years of separation wasn't gong to be breached so easily. 
The only phone in Adzislaw Nurkiewicz's town was at the post office, and it 
took a week to set up the call.

The night before, neither Steve nor Terry Nurkiewicz could sleep. At 
precisely 6 a.m., the phone rang, "Stefan?"."Father?"."How are you?"

There was still a trace of doubt in Steve's mind. Quickly, he thought of a 
reassuring question. "Father, what was the name of your horse?" "Ogien 
(Fire)," came the immediate reply. Then an old woman's voice came on the 
crackling transatlantic line.

"My knees buckled, and I almost fell to the floor," says Steve. " I never 
expected my mother to be alive too." But he recovered long enough to shout, 
"Mother! Save the Christmas tree--we're coming to Poland!"

Two weeks later, after some visa troubles had been cleared up by friendly 
Polish Embassy officials in Washington, a joyous Nurkiewicz family flew to 
Krakow.

Finally at the airport, says Steve, "I walked down the long path and saw a 
stout, gray-haired man with a cane. I had mixed emotions. I didn't know 
this man. But I ran to him and said, "At last, Dad!" We all cried."

The Nurkiewicz's two-week stay in Poland produced other surprises. Stefan 
had a 30 year old brother, born after the war, he'd never heard of, and his 
older brother, Zdzislaw, was alive and well in Russia. The 14 days and 
nights were filled with endless rounds of talking and Polish vodka.

Last June, Stefan Nurkiewicz brought his parents to America for a 10-week 
visit. "The fist thing my father wanted to see was the Statue of Liberty," 
recalls Nurkiewicz, with a trace of pride in his voice.

Two weeks after his return to Poland last September, Zdislaw Nurkiewicz 
died, finally knowing what became of the 13 year old boy he left behind 
when he went to war.

 ***************************

***************************

UPDATED 11/27/19 - Found additional information on the Original N2DAN

https://rsars.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/n2dan-story-2.pdf

Stefan Stanislaw NURKIEWICZ - N2DAN - RSARS 1676.

An appreciation by Ursula M. Sadler, W4/GØIHM

“Steve” as all his many friends knew him, or “Dan” as his radio friends 
speak of him, was bornon 16th October 1926 to Zdzislaw and Jozefa 
Nurkiewicz in Niewsierz in the county of Nowogroder, Poland. He died on 
20th May 1997 in Port Charlotte, Florida, USA leaving behind his dear wife 
Theresa (“Terry”) and his daughter Debbie and son Stephen.

Steve was reared on a military post 10 miles away from the Russian border 
as his father was the Commander of the 27th Polish Cavalry Regiment. His 
ancestors, going back to his great-grandfather, were all military men and 
all were fond of music and played some kind of instrument, mainly trumpets. 
It was no wonder therefore that Steve also took up music, his favourite 
instrument being a double-bass which he played as a member of some of the 
well- known British bands, and after he left the Army and prior to 
emigrating to the States he could be seen playing for the Saturday night 
dances both in High Wycombe and the Market Hall, Amersham. Later, in the 
States in 1952, he played with a Polish Polka Band or just entertaining 
friends in his home.

His life was a happy one, spent amongst horses with few restrictions on 
what he did, and his summers were spent on his Uncle’s estate where there 
were three lakes and three water mills, so he was able to fish to his 
heart’s content - a hobby he enjoyed all his life.

When he was about 7 or 8 years old he was introduced to SP6FZ, a ham radio 
enthusiast and it was he who gave Steve his first taste of CW. 
Unfortunately WW2 started just prior to his taking the exam and his father 
left with his Regiment in September 1939. The Red Army occupied the post so 
Steve, just under 13 years, his Mother, sister and two younger brothers 
stayed on his Uncle’s estate, his older brother remaining at the post prior 
to University. One night, about 0300,they were taken by a Red Army Officer 
and soldiers in a wagon to the railroad station and there put into a cattle 
car for a three weeks’ journey to a lonely village in Siberia. His 
adventure route he related in “MERCURY” No. 80 of March 19851 Life in 
Siberia was very hard and primitive, food was scarce and unfortunately his 
younger brothers died of malnutrition.

When Steve was 14 an announcement was made that all Polish males of 17+ had 
to report to the school house to be examined by a Russian Lady Doctor the 
same who had pronounced his brothers dead - Steve gave his age as 17 - she 
knew it was wrong but she took pity on him and signed his paper to join the 
army where they gave him a big drum and made him their mascot. He served 
with the Polish Forces in the USSR until August 1942.

One day he was passing a group of men under instruction and the teacher was 
blowing Morse with a whistle - Steve, recognizing the letter, gave the 
answer and from then on events moved quickly. He found himself disembarking 
from a Russian ship in Persia where three members of the Royal Signals were 
waiting, Steve, still as a member of the Polish Forces, came under British 
Command in Iran.

Following training in England he went back to the Middle East as an 
instructor’s instructor with the 2nd Polish Corps, 8th Army. He volunteered 
for S.O.E. and because of his knowledge of Russian and Czech was very 
useful - that part of his life remains a mystery but I do know he served in 
many places and took part in Italy with the 3rd Carpathian Signal Battalion 
and was wounded at the Battle of Monte Cassino in July 1944.

In October 1946 he served with the Polish Resettlement Corps and was 
finally discharged in August 1948. He received various decorations from 
both the Polish and British Armies and his conduct was stated as “Very 
good”. He was always going to write a book about where he served and what 
he did but apart from the odd snippet I never and never asked.

After demob and before emigrating to the USA he worked for about 3 years 
for a precision machine shop in Amersham making specialist medical 
instruments and he did similar precision work in the States where he met 
his wife who lived next door. In March 1955 he became a naturalized 
American citizen. They started their own machine shop and worked on 
specialized items for many years but following a stroke he decided to give 
it up and in 1988 they moved to Port Charlotte, Florida. Here he kept busy 
making the excellent N2DAN Mercury paddles for Morse. He enjoyed fishing in 
the canal behind his home and talking - CW of course - to his many radio 
friends.

His sudden death from liver cancer came as a terrible shock to his family 
and friends for only 2 weeks previously, after an operation to remove a 
lump on his lung, he was told he was completely free of cancer. Steve was a 
very definite person, always ready to help anyone, he had a good sense of 
humor and whatever he did he did to perfection. He will be greatly missed 
by all but for those fortunate enough to own one of his Morse paddles - he 
will live on each time the paddle is used.

REPRODUCED FROM “MERCURY” No. 80 - March 1985

REPRODUCED FROM “MERCURY” No. 80 - March 1985"P.P.C"1676 N2DAN/"PPC" is my 
own way of dealing with day-to-day life ever since I can remember - 
Patience, Perseverance and Common Sense.

I was born in Poland, near the Russian border which was 10 miles away, and 
reared on a military post. My dad was the Commander of the 27th Cavalry; my 
three uncles, grandfather, great-grandfather and great, great grandfather 
were all military men, and all played some kind of musical instrument, 
mostly trumpets. Life on the post was great - complete freedom to go 
anywhere and do anything - within reason of course. After all, who in his 
right mind would chasethe Commander's son away! Horses, horses everywhere - 
I think I knew more about horses than anybody else of my age. The school 
months were spent at the post, but the summer recess was pure joy for me; 
we stayed at my uncle's estate next to Prince Radziwill's castle. The 
property was separated by three lakes, joined together by three water 
mills, so I took to the water like a duck.

I couldn't possibly tell all that I did - if it could be done on the water, 
I did it! Once, I remember, I wanted to cross the lake like a Viking, so 
two of my buddies and I got hold of a wooden barndoor, made a mast, and 
sails from a bedsheet, and off we went. It started well enough, the wind 
was right, but we forgot about a rudder and needless to say we wound up in 
the middle of the lake, going in the wrong direction. We dropped the sails 
and paddled back to shore, and it was fun – but when I got back to the 
house my uncle was waiting with a riding crop in his hand - I could not sit 
for days! Did a lot of fishing of all sorts, but one fish I could never 
catch was a carp - little did I know that they were bred and fed for market.

When I was seven or eight, my dad bought a radio with a big battery that 
had a lot of holes in it, to put pins in. He also strung up some wire and 
for the first time in my life I heard music and voices from thin air. I was 
fascinated and couldn't wait until the family went to bed, so I could sneak 
in and listen. I just couldn't understand how those big people could be 
inside the box. Then I heard another sound, raspy, loud and sounding like a 
dying cricket - just couldn't understand it. I stayed up until 4a.m. The 
next day in school the teacher noticed that I was in some kind of daze and 
was unable to concentrate - I was half-asleep, but since I liked him, I 
told him what had transpired the night before; he said that he didn't know 
much about it, but he knew someone who did. Alas, my introduction to CW!

I was introduced to my instructor-to-be, to whom I shall be forever 
grateful, SP6FZ. Most of you old-timers should know him. Great DX man, and 
fantastic operator. He put the receiver on and I said "That's it - this is 
the funny stuff - what is it?" He said "They are talking". I said "Who is 
talking, and how?" Thereupon he came out with a book and said "Read it, 
come back and we will talk some more". It took me some time before I could 
understand parts of it, but I used "PPC". End of September 1939, I had a 
date with the Polish Communication Ministry - Jan was sure I would make it 
with flying colours. My speed was about average, the theory okay, copy 
okay; but it was meant not to be - the war broke out.

My father went West with his 27th Cavalry, armed with lances, sabres and 
carbines. The last words he said to me were "Tonight you can sleep in my 
bed" - a funny thing to say to a son – but those words were with me for 
over forty years. I have not seen or heard from him since September1939 - I 
have tried every possible way to find him but my home town was now USSR, 
and only by chance did we find each other. (See "A Family Again" - 
“MERCURY” No.69 July 1981)

Two weeks after the start of the war we heard some small arms fire, then 
Russian planes appeared in the sky, and before we knew it the Red Army was 
marching in, in columns of three. They had some big guns with them, pulled 
by horses. One guy up front played an accordion and was all smiles; I saw 
scouts 300 yards on each side of the column, not sure what to expect – but 
there was no army here. One thing stands out in my mind - I saw a few 
Russian soldiers with a rope for a rifle sling. I looked for a radio man, 
but did not see any. After the column passed, more oft hem came, but by 
that time it was no longer a novelty - they just kept coming.

A week or so later, there was a proclamation - all those owning guns must 
return them to a central place - it could be considered an amnesty. Since 
Uncle and Dad were great hunters and possessed many guns, my uncle took 
them to the place, and we never saw him again. When I visited Poland in1980 
I saw my aunt, and to this day she does not know what happened to her 
husband. Needless to say, they lost their estate, and nothing can be done 
about it. When my uncle did not return I was scared and buried my father's 
medals and other military items in a cheese cellar, and they are still 
there.

At this time we stayed at the estate, everybody knew there would be no 
school. My elder brother was not with us at this time - two weeks prior to 
the outbreak of war he went back to the post to prepare himself for the 
University; here again, I did not see or hear from him again until my 
father passed away, when he came from the USSR and I from the USA to see 
the grave, and our Mother. When you visit Poland and you are staying with 
relatives, you must register with the local police where you are staying 
and with whom; can you picture this - two men, the same name, the same 
parents, the same place of birth, but one born in USSR and one in Poland? 
The man at the desk didn't know what was going on - I told him "Just forget 
it" ! From the conversation I had with my brother, I knew that he was 
brainwashed - I have not heard from him since. His daughter - an English 
graduate at Moscow University - has not written either, so here we are - it 
is one screwed-up world!

By this time, the Red Army occupied the post, so we couldn't go back. Then 
it all started – my long, sometimes painful, travel on this globe. One 
night, at 3a.m., there was a knock on the door- my Mom opened it and there 
was a Red Army captain with six soldiers, telling us in perfect Polish "You 
are going to be repatriated and free at last".(They considered this part of 
Poland to be Byelo-Russia). "You have 15 minutes to get your belongings 
together, and only 20 kilos". What had happened was that the local 
Communists pointed out the intelligentsia, and any families with education, 
or office-holders, were taken, be they teachers, policemen, retired 
military personnel, or whatever; in other words, any potential leaders were 
eliminated from Poland, and all that was left were farmers and peasants, 
easy prey for conversion to Communism. The properties taken from the 
intelligentsia were divided up, and for these peasants it was great to be 
landowners - the type of government meant nothing to them.

We were loaded on a horse-drawn wagon and started for the railroad station, 
about 15 miles away. The weather was getting colder, my Mom made me wear a 
brand-new sheepskin coat with some embroidery on it (it came from the Alps 
- my Christmas present); I had long boots on, and in one of them my Boy 
Scout knife. One of the soldiers saw the knife and took it from me, telling 
me "Don't worry, you can buy anything in the USSR". At the railroad station 
there were thousands of people - those males over 13 years old went into 
different trains. I was one month before my thirteenth birthday, so I 
stayed with my family - mother, sister and two younger brothers. They 
loaded us into cattle cars, the only toilet facility being two boards put 
together in a "V" type arrangement, protruding through a door. If one had 
to relieve himself, it was in front of 50 people. Some women made a circle 
by standing shoulder to shoulder, and this was repeated every time someone 
had to go.

The trip took about three weeks - there were many delays due to the 
military priority. Once a day we would be allowed to send one person from 
each car to fetch a pail of water and a few loaves of bread, for the whole 
car. One day it was my turn; about 30 of us, boys and women, went - I saw a 
chance to jump on a train that was going West, and would have made it back 
to 6

Poland if it hadn’t been for my sheepskin coat! It was out of place in 
Russia. I walked around the station for about two hours; the train going 
West started to move, and just when I was ready to jump on it I heard 
"Stop"! They took me to a local police station - I played dumb, but to no 
avail. They must have had a pretty good record, because they knew where my 
original train was going. I was put on another train, also full of people; 
I still had the bucket; the place to which they took my family was in the 
middle of nothing - the nearest settlement was 10 miles awayfrom this 
God-forsaken village. Not a single tree in sight, just a flat prairie with 
very rich soil; you could travel for days in any direction and see nothing.

The second train was headed further East, but they took me off it, and the 
policeman said to me "In a few days you will be with your family". He took 
me to his house, his wife and two children were very nice to me, and I had 
a good meal for the first time in two weeks. They kept asking questions 
about Poland, my family, etc. - it was the very first time that they had 
ever met a foreigner. The policeman told me something that did not make 
sense at the time - he said “There will be a war between Russia and 
Germany”.

The next day I was put in a horse-drawn wagon and started for the village - 
just me and an old driver. We talked for hours - he too was interested in 
Poland and any news. (I did and still do speak and write Russian). We came 
to a river and he said “See those huts on the other side? That is where 
your mother is”. From the bank of the river it looked deep, and I thought 
“How is he going to cross it?”. But to my surprise he unhitched the horse 
and let him loose. The horse went right into the water and started to swim 
for the other side. Then I saw a rowboat tied to a stake; we crossed the 
river and started for the village; a 50foot wide corridor as a street, 
ending at each end of the village, with clay or earth huts on either side, 
two water wells in the middle of the corridor, a one-room brick 
schoolhouse, and one larger house where all the workers had their meals, of 
soup and bread mostly. Once in a while if a horse or a cow died they had 
meat (I learned later that quite a lot of animals died - one way or 
another). The driver led me to the sixth house from the south, and a 
reunion. My Mom looked as though she hadn’t slept for days, worrying about 
me, and I was glad to be with her at last.

The hut was very small, one room and one bed, in which my Mom slept with 
the two younger boys, while I slept with my sister on top of a bread oven, 
under which was a bunch of chickens. It was the best place to sleep, always 
warm and close to the ceiling. For an alarm clock we had the rooster - 
precisely at 5a.m. he would start! I had some thoughts of doing away with 
him! The floor was clay, one window that could not be opened. Summer time 
weather not bad, but the winter was extremely cold. This was Siberia.

I came to the right place - nice river, houses, horses. They are all 
horsemen, and I thought that I knew horses - how wrong could I have been!

Life, Siberian style. First of all, I had to go to school; the curriculum 
was quite interesting, and I think they covered more subjects than European 
or US schools. They knew more about geography, arithmetic, international 
affairs, than most kids do at the same age. I made a hit - I spoke Russian. 
Some thoughts on the matter: I know what CCCP stands for, but those 
Siberian kids had another version: Sachar Stoich Sto Rubley. The letter “C” 
in Russian is “S”, the letter “P” is “R”. They were saying “Sugar costs a 
hundred roubles”. Once in a while a wagon would come with supplies to the 
feeding house, and all merchandise had to be transported by boat. There 
were 3month-old newspapers (just like “Mercury”!!), sugar, tea, tobacco, 
combs, needles and odds and ends. The tobacco was nothing more than 
home-grown and chopped up, no cigarette papers - they used newspaper, and 
it tasted just like the “V” cigarettes. (Les VK2NLE note - your comments 
about the “V” cigarettes in “Jimmy” and that they came from Indian-grown 
tobacco - you could be wrong! I remember once in Tunisia I ran out of them 
and couldn’t be relieved from my station- rolled up some camel droppings 
and it tasted just the same!). The goods were gone in no time flat, but the 
system worked, because next time those who couldn’t get near them were the 
first in line.

There was no radio or TV, such as we know it today. All news was very old, 
and only from the newspapers. I went to school and in the afternoons worked 
in the fields collecting cow droppings that were dry - this was the only 
winter fuel that was available, and those who didn’t have enough froze. In 
the wintertime each hut was connected by a rope to the water wells, and if 
one went outside to collect some more fuel, one had to have a rope around 
his waist or perish. Many died this way, only twenty or thirty yards away. 
When it snowed you could not see ten feet ahead of you. There was a bell on 
the school roof and they rang it every half-hour; if you ventured too far 
with the wind blowing the other way, there was no way you could hear it.

On one occasion, when it was not snowing, I was asked to go and help with 
the hay for the animals, who were in the barns for the winter. For reasons 
not understood by me, the haystacks were about four miles from the village 
- why they didn’t bring the hay in during the summer I will never know. I 
went - it was 50°C below. Five sleds and twenty men. We loaded the hay and 
on the way back a pack of wolves appeared and followed the horses. The men 
had long whips and kept them cracking, scaring the wolves away. On 
occasion, some teams came back with a dead wolf - that was a real prize, 
because you would keep the skin.

With everything, you were allowed one per family - one cow or one pig - but 
no horses When the animal was killed the skin had to be given to the 
Russian government, There was all sorts of strange goings-on, animals dying 
for one reason or another - broken legs and the like – and nobody cared 
about the skin. I became a great skinner, and could have used my Boy Scout 
knife - we did have meat.

In this village there were just five Polish families - I guess they spread 
us out all over Siberia so that eventually the Poles would become 
assimilated into the Russian population. In springtime everyone was at the 
river bank trying to collect some wood that floated down. Sometimes, after 
the snow had melted, whole houses would be floating in the swollen waters. 
There was a bend in the river and calm water near the village, so it was 
always full of debris. I worked in the fields, ploughing, cutting hay, etc. 
Each sundown an official would come and measure how much eachone had 
ploughed - that went into the record book and at the end of the season, 
after the government took its share of wheat, the rest was divided 
accordingly.

When they found out that I was good with horses, they made me a 
horse-breaker. What it meant was not to ride them, but to break them for 
work - I was a Polish cowboy! The way they did it was to take an unridden 
young horse, put a harness on it with a long rope and a log or telephone 
pole on the other end, and let the horse go. Since there was no danger of 
the horse getting caught on anything, they would run for a day or so and 
always return to the herd, pulling the heavy object. The next time the 
harness was put on, the horse would run a little slower - repeating the 
procedure a few times would turn him into a working horse.

There was a young lad named Oleg - we became good friends. He taught me a 
lot, and I showed him a few tricks too. We did the normal things boys do. I 
was introduced to chewing tobacco, and how to make an extremely strong 
alcoholic drink from horse’s milk - for me, one, drink and I was out!. How 
to make a whip, some things about the girls in the village, and those sort 
of things. One day Oleg said “Tomorrow morning we are going to see if we 
can get schuka” (I must explain - “schuka” in Russian is a pike, and “suka” 
is a bitch - written differently, but sounds very similar).I said “Why in 
the morning?”-, he told me that it was the best time to get “suka”. It so 
happened that there was in the village a lady about 30 or 40 years old, 
rather loose with her favours. I had seen her a few times, making goo—goo 
eyes at the men and boys. Well, needless to say, that night was pure horror 
for me - anticipation! I don’t think I slept at all. At 5- 30 in the 
morning,

waiting by the water well, I saw Oleg coming; he was carrying a long stick, 
and my thoughts went crazy. “Is he going to beat her up first, so she 
would, or is he some sort of nut and must have the long stick with him?”. 
Anyway, we started for the river, and again I thought “Why the river - 
there are no bushes or any place to hide”. We sat down - the sun was not up 
yet. I asked him “Where is the suka?” - he said “Who cares”. I said “Didn’t 
you say yesterday that you were going to get a suka?”. He looked at me and 
said “Schuka, you stupid Polack, schuka!” - I must say I felt much better!

What happened next was something I will never forget. He took a guitar 
string from his pocket made a loop in one end and tied the other end to the 
end of his stick. He said “We must wait for the sun to come up a little 
more”. Then we walked to the edge of the water very slowly, towards the 
sun. He stopped and adjusted the loop until it was about six inches in 
diameter, then very slowly lowered the loop into the water. With one big 
motion, he pulled straight up and over his shoulder - I saw something come 
out of the water, fast. When I looked back I saw the biggest pike of my 
life! Oleg explained - the pike likes to stay close to the shore in the 
morning, waiting for his prey. You judge the size, adjust the loop 
accordingly, and very slowly get the loop over his head, just beyond the 
gills, and pull up - you’ll get a fish dinner! I have learned this very 
well, and we often had schuka, if not suka! PPC.

An announcement was made - all Polish males seventeen years and older were 
to report to the schoolhouse. I went. There were three of us. The Russian 
woman doctor examined the first two and they were accepted. When it came to 
me, she took one look and said “Shouldn’t you be with your mother?”. I said 
“No, I’m seventeen and I want to be a soldier”.(I lied - I was 
fourteen).This was the same doctor who pronounced my two younger brothers 
dead, and I suppose she took pity on me, and after some unladylike remarks 
about my anatomy signed the paper. I was i

We went to a big camp. Men from all over Siberia kept coming, and each was 
interrogated and assigned to a proper place. When it came to me, they asked 
if I would like to ride on a big gun - I said “No”. They asked me if I 
would like to beat a drum, since I had taken music in school. I said “Yes”, 
so they made me a mascot, gave me a drum, and I was very happy. One day, 
after practice, on my way to my quarters I saw a group of men, a 
blackboard, and a guy with a whistle. He was whistling CW, and asked “Does 
anyone know this letter?”. As I was now near them, I said “I do, that is 
Q”. After a few words with the whistler, and in less than two hours I was 
in front of the bandmaster, who told me “Get your stuff together, you are 
going on a trip”. By Russian boat to Persia, and at the port as I was 
disembarking there were three British soldiers waiting, and this was the 
first time I had met His Majesty’s Royal Signals. (If Sgt. Barnes, Royal 
Signals, is still with us, and remembers the pukey-looking chap getting off 
the boat - I would like to get in touch with you. You should remember what 
you said - “Come on, lad, smartly now - you’re in good hands”. I think all 
sergeants are born with discipline in their blood).

>From Persia to England, various posts, crash programmes - structure of 
Royal Signals, equipment and structure of British military. Then back to 
the Middle East to become “Instructors’ instructor”. This was 2nd Polish 
Corps, 8th Army. Ironic - when I got off the boat, I never dreamed I would 
be back in USSR, in British battledress, instructing Russian signallers on 
Western equipment.

I will skip most of the Service details for now; perhaps when I retire and 
have more time to spareto compose my thoughts and recollections, I will 
write about them.

Leaving the 2nd Polish Corps to become W/T, SLU, SOE, SO, kept me on the 
move to so many places, sometimes I cannot remember them all. Demobbed in 
1948, Hodgemore Camp, Bucks, lived in Amersham, worked in Chesham and 
played bass at Saturday dances. I came to the USA on a British passport in 
1951.

I must publicly thank Jack Cooper for the very small advert in “73” 
Magazine about the RSARS.For if it wasn’t for that, there would be no 
N2DAN/1676. My old pals like G3UAA, G3UDU,G3XSN and so many, many more that 
I have worked with for years, never told me about the RSARS. I could have 
been a member back in the 50’s. I am not surprised at Alf, G3UAA - he had a 
reason not to tell! I guess everybody likes to be #1, but I’ll tell him 
this - if I ever get to the UK again, he will become an instant #2 ! Since 
becoming a member, I have enjoyed this elitegroup, and met so many 
interesting people.

Back in Amersham, I was a medical-instrument maker; when I came to the USA 
I became a machinist and later established my own factory in the X-ray 
equipment field - that is what I stilldo for a living.

I met XYL Terry a month after coming to the USA. She lived next door and 
was going out with some funny character. At that time I was playing bass 
for extra money, but had no car. Her boyfriend had one. I asked this young 
lady if she would like to come with me to hear the Eddie Condon band. We 
loaded into his car, and away we went. She kept looking at the stage! They 
took me home - at the front door, with the motor running, I got out and 
thanked them both. Terry started to get out too, when the guy said “Stay, 
stay - I’ll take you home” (20 feet to go!!). I knew this was it - 33 years 
now.

In those days I wanted to go fishing so badly. I had done no such thing 
since leaving the USSR. I saw a lake in Fresh Meadow Park, World’s Fair 
grounds in New York City. I got myself a fishing pole and went. I caught 
some nice fish, large goldfish and a few eels and I was very happy, because 
the other fishermen had nothing. Then, this man comes along, taps me on the 
shoulder and says “May I see your licence?” and I said “What licence?”. He 
said “The fresh water one”. I played dumb, but this was no USSR - he took 
me to a police station, they finger-printed me an dasked a million 
questions. Only after the Captain showed up and I promised to get the 
licence the next day and show it to them, would they consider forgetting 
the matter. I did - and have not fished fresh water fish since! Salt water 
fish and my Polish boat, Terry III - I shall write about it in the summer.

After the war my father was considered a bandit because he dared to turn 
his 27th Cavalry, what was left of it and now underground, against the Red 
Army. He changed his name and got away with it for quite some time, before 
someone betrayed him. From what he told me, he had one too many vodkas and 
the lady friend who was with him, gave him away. He was sentenced to death, 
but it was commuted to 15 years, due to his age.I have been talking to SP 
hams for many years, in Polish of course. So I had quite a net going, 
sometimes as many as ten at a time. When we knew that we were going to 
visit Poland, there was no way I could tell my parents. The only telephone 
they could use is in the general store/postoffice, and it takes a week to 
get the call set up. I went on the air with a CQ SP9 and someone about 80km 
away answered me. I asked him if he would write to the address and tell my 
parents that we would be there on Sunday. After giving him my parents 
address, I heard BK - it turned out to be Mr.”K”. He said “Forget the 
letter, I will go and tell them”. (I took a chance, I though tthe FCC would 
understand, after all it had been 41 years). At the airport, I met Mr.”K”, 
his brother (also a ham), their wives and children. A few days later we 
went to Mr.”K”s house for an evening of vodka, three houses away from my 
parents! In his shack, on the wall, was my oldWA2YBR QSL card, with my name 
and address on the back, and he never knew, nor did my Mom - and my Mom had 
tea with his wife many times.

If my Dad had not changed his name, I would have had the chance to know 
him. In reality I know he was my father, but at the same time a stranger. I 
am glad I brought them to the USA for a summer, and was beginning to know 
him; upon his return to Poland, he passed on within two weeks.

Our second visit to Poland, in 1981, was a sad one, but also enjoyable. I 
met so many hams, answered a million questions - saw rigs and set-ups you 
wouldn’t believe! Hence T6 notes! Thistrip, stayed in Warsaw for three days 
at the Victoria Hotel. Our window was facing the Tomb of the Unknown 
Soldier. On the day of our departure I asked the reception desk to wake me 
at 7a.m. (By nature, I can be funny or serious, prefer the former on the 
air or off the air). precisely at 7a.m.the phone rang and a military band 
struck up a regimental tune at precisely the same moment. I went to the 
window - what a sight - a big band playing - formations of all sorts of 
units, all dressed differently; one unit had funny hats with feathers. 
Commands were given, change of the honour guard took place, more commands, 
saluting and all that military stuff. Then the whistle and the band struck 
up again and the units on the parade started to march past the Tomb and the 
Victoria, giving me a perfect view - how they didn’t kick each other in the 
rear end with theirgoose-stepping I’ll never know. I paid my bill and the 
clerk gave me a little form to fill out, if wewished. You know the sort of 
thing - how did you like your room, the service, etc.Well, I just couldn’t 
resist - I wrote “The service was fine, the room fine, and you didn’t have 
to go to all the trouble of staging a military parade in my honour” !!
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